First of all, let's review the circumstances:
- It's baseball, the least violent major sport.
- It's San Francisco, a wealthy, educated, tolerant city.
- It's their third championship in the past five years.
The violence-following-championships has gotten so predictable that it's likely a self-fulfilling prophecy now. If everyone knows that identity-concealing chaos is about to erupt, people will be more likely to act without civility. A riot is more likely to start if everyone believes a riot is about to start.
Here in Canada, we don't usually riot following one of our teams winning it all. At least, I don't think we do, it's been so long I don't remember. But we do trash a city when we lose. That at least makes some kind of sense, destroying things in anger rather than celebration. But it was, in a way, more embarrassing. It's one thing to explain to the world that one of your cities burst into violence because of complex psychosocial dynamics. But we had to explain that one of our cities exploded into violence because we really do get that frustrated over hockey.
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